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SAGE Publications

Cover Image: Media Power in Politics, 5th Edition
  • Date: 07/15/2006
  • Format: Print Paperback
  • Price: $54.95
  • ISBN: 978-1-93311-677-8
  • Pages: 432

Media Power in Politics, 5th Edition
Doris A. Graber, University of Illinois at Chicago
Editor


Students find it difficult to sort through the wealth of literature on media power and make sense of it all. Doris Graber selects the best of this rich and burgeoning literature to reflect the most thought provoking and recent scholarship about traditional and "new" media and analyze mass media effects on the American political system. Criteria for inclusion remains the same as in past trusted editions: readings must be lively and readily understandable and must show how media influenced specific political situations. Thirty-six selections--twenty of them new to this edition and reflecting current developments--represent the work of well-known scholars and media professionals and mirror the interdisciplinary nature of the field. They are written by leading lights, like Robert Entman, Michael Schudson, Lance Bennett and Darrell West, and by rising new stars in the field, such as Bruce Bimber, Matthew Baum, Claes de Vreese, and Stephen Farnsworth. Among the hotbutton issues covered in this edition are the watchdog role of the press during wartime, battles over framing of political issues, the role of soft news and entertainment broadcasts as political information sources for disinterested citizens, and the role of non-traditional news sources, especially the Internet.

Readings are divided into six parts, each covering an important facet of American politics. Part I deals with mass media effects in general. Parts II through V explore the influence of mass media on political perceptions and opinions, on presidential and referendum elections, on participants within and outside the political power structure, and on the formation and implementation of domestic and foreign policies. Part VI examines private and public efforts in the United States and abroad to control the impact of mass media and to shape media offerings. Graber provides introductions to each part and headnotes for each selection.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction

PART I. PUTTING MASS MEDIA EFFECTS IN PERSPECTIVE

1. NEW! "The Role of Information in Political Change," Bruce Bimber
2. The Influence and Effects of Mass Media, Denis Mc Quail
3. NEW! "Why Democracies Need an Unlovable Press," Michael Schudson
4. Newspapers, Walter Lipprnann
5. NEW! "The Real War Will Never Get on Television: An Analysis of Casualty Imagery in American Television Coverage of the Iraq War," Sean Aday
6. NEW! "Framing Environmental Conflicts: The Edwards Aquifer Dispute," Linda L. Putnam

PART II. SHAPING THE POLITICAL AGENDA AND PUBLIC OPINION

7. Agenda-Setting Research: Where Has It Been, Where Is It Going?, Everett M. Rogers and James W. Dearing
8. What Moves Public Opinion?, Benjamin I. Page, Robert Y. Shapiro, and Glenn R. Dempsey
9. NEW! "Misperceptions, the Media, and the Iraq War," Steven Kull, Clay Ramsay, Evan Lewis
10. NEW! "Super-Predators or Victims of Societal Neglect? Framing Effects in Juvenile Crime Coverage," Frank D. Gilliam, Jr. and Shanto Iyengar
11. NEW! "Sex, Lies, and War: How Soft News Brings Foreign Policy to the Inattentive Public," Matthew A. Baum
12. Constructing Public Opinion: The Uses of Fictional and Nonfictional Television in Conversations about the Environment, Michael X. Delli Carpini and Bruce A. Williams

PART III. INFLUENCING ELECTION OUTCOMES

13. NEW! "Television Advertising: Learning about the Candidates," Darrell M. West
14. Open Season: How the News Media Cover Presidential Campaigns in the Age of Attack Journalism, Larry J. Sabato
15. NEW! "The Real Lessons of Howard Dean: Reflections on the First Digital Campaign," Matthew Hindman
16. The Miscast Institution, Thomas E. Patterson
17. NEW! "Bill Clinton, the Empathy Candidate and the Living Room Campaign," Joseph Hayden
18. NEW! "The Impact of Referendum Campaigns," Claes H. de Vreese and Holli A. Semetko,

PART IV. CONTROLLING MEDIA POWER: POLITICAL ACTORS VERSUS THE PRESS

19. The Uses of News: Theory and (Presidential) Practice, Timothy E. Cook
20. NEW! "The Struggle over Shaping the News," Stephen J. Farnsworth and S. Robert Lichter
21. How Members of Congress Use the Media to Influence Public Policy, Karen M. Kedrowski
22. I Am on TV Therefore I Am, Stephen Hess
23. NEW! "The Case of the American Civil Rights Movement," Doug McAdam
24. NEW! "Effects of News Coverage on Policy Attention and Actions," Itzhak Yanovitzky

PART V. GUIDING PUBLIC POLICIES

25. Mass Media Roles in Foreign Policy, Patrick OƒxHeffernan
26. NEW! "Mediating the Public's Influence on Foreign Policy," Robert M. Entman
27. Reporting the Gulf War, William Hachten with the collaboration of Marva Hachten
28. NEW! "The Watchdog Role," W. Lance Bennett and William Serrin
29. NEW! "Increases in Calls to the CDC National STD and AIDS Hotline Following AIDS Related Episodes in a Soap Opera," May G. Kennedy, Ann O'Leary, Vicki Beck, Katrina Pollard and Penny Simpson
30. Interest Groups, the Media, and Policy Debate Formation: An Analysis of Message Structure, Rhetoric, and Source Cues, Nayda Terkildsen, Frauke I. Schnell, and Cristina Ling

PART VI. REGULATING AND MANIPULATING MEDIA EFFECTS

31. Communications Policy and the Public Interest, Patricia Aufderheide
32. NEW! "The Global Governance of the Internet: Bringing the State Back In," Daniel W. Drezner
33. NEW! "Terrorism, Censorship and the lst Amendment," Doris A. Graber
34. How Policy Makers Deal with the Press, Martin Linsky
35. NEW! "Managed Democracy' in Russia: Putin and the Press," Masha Lipman and Michael McFaul
36. Strategic Communication, Jarol B. Manheim

Testimonials

"Professor Graber has consistently, through several editions of Media Power in Politics, put together a challenging, cross-cutting, and eminently sound set of readings which are ideal for my upper division course in media and politics."

- Frederick P. Lee, Winona State University

“This volume combines much of the major literature in the field in one place. It is complete, accessible, and of inestimable value in teaching undergraduate and graduate students in Communication and Political Science. I highly recommend it.”

- Mary E. Stuckey, Georgia State University

“I have used Media Power in Politics in my Government and Mass Media seminar for many years and have never been disappointed. It is, in my view, the most insightful and useful collection of classic and contemporary readings in political communication. Doris Graber’s skillful selection and editing of these readings makes them concise and accessible, and enables this single volume to cover a very wide range of subjects and approaches in political communication in a highly engaging manner.”

- David Weaver, Indiana University

“The new fifth edition of Doris Graber's Media Power and Politics is an effective updating of a very useful reader. This collection is a wide-ranging representation of the important themes and concerns in research on the mass media and politics.”

- Michael J. Hooper, Temple University
Bio(s)
Doris A. Graber, University of Illinois at Chicago

Doris A. Graber is professor of political science at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She has written and edited numerous articles and books on the media and public opinion, including Mass Media and American Politics, Seventh Edition (2006), The Power of Communication: Managing Information in Public Organizations (2003), and Processing Politics: Learning from Television in the Internet Age (2001), which won the 2003 Goldsmith Book Prize. This award is given by the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and Public Policy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government.

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